Following Yves' lead, I took a closer look at Adobe Jenson. Here's a sample of the Type 1 version:
Note the way the right leg of the 'n' joins the serif. This feature also appears in the OpenType versions. (Hint: download the glyph complement PDF and you can zoom it larger than the web-based typesetter.) So, it doesn't look like it's Adobe Jenson.
I also took a look at Monotype Centaur and Venetian301BT, and they have some similarities, but they don't match either.
Is the original sample a metal face instead of a digitized version?
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8.Dec.2004 3.50pm
I believe this is a Jenson type, but I haven't been able to find
out which one yet.
9.Dec.2004 11.10am
Following Yves' lead, I took a closer look at Adobe Jenson. Here's a sample of the Type 1 version:
Note the way the right leg of the 'n' joins the serif. This feature also appears in the OpenType versions. (Hint: download the glyph complement PDF and you can zoom it larger than the web-based typesetter.) So, it doesn't look like it's Adobe Jenson.
I also took a look at Monotype Centaur and Venetian301BT, and they have some similarities, but they don't match either.
Is the original sample a metal face instead of a digitized version?